San Antonio’s pro sports scene features Spurs, Rampage,...

1of 4San Antonio Rampage left wing Joe Whitney shoots during the second period of an AHL hockey game against the Charlotte Checkers, Friday, Nov. 18, 2016, in San Antonio, Texas. (Darren Abate/AHL)Photo: Darren Abate /AHL

2of 4SA FC players celebrate after a goal during the first half of a USL soccer match between LA Galaxy II and San Antonio FC, Saturday, April 1, 2017, at Toyota Field in San Antonio, Texas. (Darren Abate/USL)Photo: Darren Abate /USL

3of 4River Stephens of the San Antonio Missions scores the winning run in the bottom of the 10th inning as Arkansas Travelers catcher Joe DeCarlo can't handle the ball during the San Antonio Missions home opener at Wolff Stadium on Thursday, April 12, 2018.Photo: Billy Calzada, Staff / San Antonio Express-News

4of 4San Antonio Spurs' Tony Parker, left, takes a shot as Golden State Warriors' David West, bottom, and Kevon Looney, right, defend in the second half of Game 3 of a first-round NBA basketball playoff series in San Antonio, Thursday, April 19, 2018. Golden State won 110-97.Photo: Eric Gay /Associated Press

Three of San Antonio’s four pro sports teams are owned and operated by Spurs Sports and Entertainment. The lone exception is the San Antonio Missions.

A fifth franchise, the Spurs-owned Stars of the WNBA, moved to Las Vegas after the 2017 season following the sale of the team.

NBA BASKETBALL

San Antonio Spurs

Skinny: Five-time NBA World Champions (1999, 2003, 2005, 2007 and 2014), the Spurs merged into the NBA from the ABA in the 1976-77 season.

Four players (George Gervin, David Robinson, Artis Gilmore and Louie Dampier) and two coaches (Larry Brown, Jerry Tarkanian) are inductees to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. The Spurs had a 2017-18 regular season record of 47-35 (third place in the Southwest Division). Golden State ended the Spurs’ season, winning the best-of-7 Western Conference first round playoff series (4-1).

Coach: Gregg Popovich

Notable players: LaMarcus Aldridge averaged 23 points-per-game, winding up as the team’s leading scorer for 2017-18. Kawhi Leonard was second with 16 ppg, but only played nine games due to injury. At age 40, Manu Ginobili still provided a spark to the team, having signed a two-year contract last year. Similar to the end of the 2016-17 season, Ginobili has yet to say if he will come back for the 2018-19 season.

Off the court, assistant coach James Borrego left to take the Charlotte Hornets head-coaching job. Assistant coaches Ettore Messina, Ime Udoka and Becky Hammon have also been contacted by other NBA teams for possible positions.

Season: 82 regular season games (41 home, 41 away), from mid-October to mid-April.

Skinny: The Missions, who started play in 1888, are the city’s oldest sports franchise. The 13-time Texas League champions are playing their final season in the Texas League, one of three leagues in Double-A baseball. They are a farm team for the San Diego Padres. Starting in 2019, the franchise will move up to Triple-A, playing in the Pacific Coast League. The Elmore Sports Group will move the its’ Colorado Springs Triple-A franchise to San Antonio (keeping the Missions name) and send the Double-A franchise to Amarillo. After 25 seasons at Wolff Stadium, the Triple-A move includes the prospect of a new, larger baseball stadium. The price tag for the new stadium, plus how it will be paid for, the location and when construction would start are all unknown.

Naylor and Allen are the Missions’ early-season breakout players. In his fourth season in the minors, Naylor, the 24-year-old left-handed first baseman, had the team’s best batting average (.352 through 37 games) and ranked among the top five hitters in the Texas League.

Also in his fourth minor league season, left-hander Allen had the most wins of any Missions’ pitcher and ranked among the top five in Texas League in ERA. Tatis is the No. 7 prospect in MiLB and had eight HRs in 38 games. Quantrill is a top-50 prospect.

Season: 140 regular season games (70 home, 70 away), from early April to early September.

Skinny: The Rampage play in the American Hockey League, the top development league for all 31 National Hockey League teams. The Rampage were affiliated with both the St. Louis Blues and Colorado Avalanche in 2017-18. The Rampage are among 30 teams in the AHL, separated into two conferences (Eastern and Western) with each conference broken into two divisions. San Antonio will play in the Pacific Division in the Western Conference in 2018-19. The 2017-18 AHL season marked the Rampage’s 16th year in the league.

The 2017-18 season was the second time Agozzino playing for the Rampage (he was with the team in 2015-16 but spent the 2016-17 season in Chicago). Agozzino was the Rampage’s leading goal scorer with 23 goals in 72 games as well as the team’s leader in points with 44. Blais, only playing in 42 games, was second in points with 40 but led the team in assists with 23. Rookie Husso ended the season among the top 12 goalies in the AHL with a 2.42 goals allowed average in 38 games.

Skinny: San Antonio FC kicked off its’ third season in the United Soccer League in March 2018. The USL is the largest pro soccer league in North America with 33 teams covering 22 states and two Canadian provinces. The USL is split into two conference, Eastern and Western (SAFC is in the West). The USL is expanding with six more teams joining the league in the next three years (four in 2019, two in 2021). San Antonio FC is an affiliate of Major League Soccer’s New York City FC.

Head coach: Darren Powell.

Notable players: Diego Restrepo, goalkeeper

Restrepo, who helped lead Virginia to the 2009 NCAA Division I championship, signed with San Antonio FC in March 2017. He didn’t begin last season as the starter but assumed the spot when Matt Cardone was injured five games into the season. Restrepo ended 2017 leading the USL in shutouts with 12 clean sheets. This season, Restrepo is one of the USL’s top five leaders in saves and ranks in the top 10 league wide in clean sheets.

Season: 34 regular season games (17 home, 17 away) over a 31-week period that began in mid-March and concludes in early October.